This study commissioned by the Geospatial Council of Australia (GCA) and carried out by ACIL Allen, examines the Australian geospatial industry’s current value and also its potential impact on the Australian economy in 2034. The study builds upon a previous assessment conducted in 2008.
The assessment of Geospatial information comprises all information with a location. The geospatial sector describes the organisations and professionals that acquire, integrate, manage, analyse, map, distribute, and use geographic, temporal, and geospatial information and knowledge.
The study highlights the critical role of geospatial information in enhancing national productivity and shows its significant direct economic impact on Australia’s economy. Furthermore, it seeks to explore opportunities for expanding its potential usage for further societal benefit.
The study has sought to capture some of the various societal benefits from the day-to-day use of geospatial information, such as tackling climate change, environmental management, sustainability and emissions reduction monitoring, resilience planning, emergency and national disaster response and management, along with defence and security. As some of these impacts of geospatial can be difficult to quantify and monetize, these are articulated in a series of sector-based case studies that showcase how geospatial services add value across the Australian economy.
The case studies include:
Each case study highlights how industry make use of a range of geospatial services across sectors and deliver impact to a broad range of end-users and beneficiaries. The URL for the case study companion report which includes 65 sectoral examples is included in the references section.
Key findings:
The sector in 2023-24 will contribute an additional AUD 39 billion to Australian GDP and over 12,000 jobs. By 2033-34, it is projected that the contribution could be an additional AUD 90 billion in GDP, and an additional 32,000 jobs, assuming a favourable operating scenario.
Summary of impact under a favourable operating scenario

Source: GCA / ACIL Allen
Over the next decade, the economic impacts in terms of economic activity, economic welfare and the employment opportunities generated are significant (see figure below). The undiscounted impact on economic output is projected to be AUD 689 billion over the period and the impact on real income is projected to be AUD 565 billion over the same period. Employment is projected to be higher by 21,700 FTE jobs on average over the period.
Summary of gains to the Australian economy (2023 – 2034)

Source: GCA / ACIL Allen
The total impact on output for selected sectors over the 2023-24 to 2033-34 period is summarised in the figure below. The largest impact over the period occurs in the mining sector where output is projected to be AUD 161 billion higher that it would have otherwise been without modern geospatial data services. Over the same period, the increase is AUD 72 billion for government, AUD 55 billion for construction, AUD 42 billion for financial services and insurance and AUD 48 billion for agriculture, fisheries and forestry.
Summary of impact on industries

Source: GCA / ACIL Allen
Find this article at:
https://acilallen.com.au/projects/geospatial/economic-impact-of-geospatial-services-in-australia
A companion report featuring 65 case studies can be accessed using the same link above.